Litigating a DNA Case
Frye v. United States. 1923.The Frye Standard
• Lie-detector (polygraph test).• Sufficiently established to have
gained general acceptance by scientific community.
• The Frye court bestowed on judges a gatekeeping function.
Federal Rules of Evidence, 1975• In an effort to establish uniformity, the Supreme
Court put the following into law:– Rule 104(a)- allows the court to determine the
qualifications of a person to be a witness and the admissibility of evidence.
– Rule 702- allows for judges to permit expert testimony.– Rule 402- allows judges to admit “all relevant evidence.”– Rule 403- allows judges to exclude relevant evidence
based on its value, if its deemed potentially confusing or misleading, or if its considered a waste of time.
• Gave more power to the judges.– Promoted judges from gatekeepers to masters of the
courtroom.
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 1993. The Daubert Standard.
• Has the scientific technique been tested? Validity?
• Peer review or publication?• Is the rate of error known?• What is the degree of
acceptance?
TWGDAM and SWGDAM • TWGDAM- Technical Working Group on DNA
Analysis Methods.– Established to assure that DNA testing was
performed reliably.• SWGDAM- Scientific Working Group on DNA
Analysis Methods.– Recommend revisions to quality assurance
standards.– Serve as a forum to discuss, share, evaluate forensic
biology methods.– Recommend and conduct research to develop and
validate methods.
Admissibility of RFLP Data
• Andrews v. State. 1987.
STR and mtDNA Decisions
• PCR-STR DNA Evidence- 9 cases in California.– Usually not disputed, but there
are exceptions. • People v. Bokin. 1999.• State v. Pfenning. 2000.• People v. Shreck. 2000.
• Mitochondrial DNA- 1 case in California.– Not as clearly established as
PCR-STR based testing.– Admissible in at least 18 states.– Inadmissible- State v. Crow.
1998.
Exonerating the Innocent• The Innocence Project
– Barry Scheck and Peter Neufeld 1992
– Rape and homicide– 280 inmates exonerated as of
12/1/2011– Most cases received go
unresolved– 48 states allow for
postconviction DNA testing, but some of the laws are limited
• DNA Exonerations By Year In US
• Factors Leading To Wrongful Convictions
Roger Keith Coleman
• Roger waiting for an interview on death row in the Greensville Correctional Center, Jarratt, VA, May 20,1992.
• New DNA tests confirmed the guilt of Coleman, who went to his death in Virginia's electric chair in 1992.
Defending DNA Evidence
• Use an expert/s– Admission of DNA test results– Admission of statistics– Admission of an explanation of the DNA
results
Attacking DNA Evidence
• Use an expert/s– Admission of DNA test results– Admission of statistics– Admission of an explanation of the DNA
results
Admission of DNA test results
• New type of DNA test• Expert not qualified to testify to DNA results• Laboratory not accredited• Testing not performed by certified technicians• Lack of discovery material or notice with respect
to the admission• Improperly obtained DNA evidence• DNA profile should have been purged from
database
Admission of Statistics
• Expert not qualified to testify to statistics• Statistics do not conform to standards
accepted by the scientific community• Improper database used
Admission of an explanation of the DNA results
• Expert not qualified to testify to statistics for specific context
• Attacking laboratory techniques and conditions– Use of accepted techniques– Quality control and assurance– Use of proficiency testing and audits– Laboratory error
General Routes of Attack
• DNA test that is used• Chain of custody• Expert Witness• Contamination• Choice not to employ several different DNA
tests, sequencing• Use of PCR• Preventing testimony regarding the issue being
decided